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Friday, 28 February 2014

With apologies to the male writers I know struggling to be recognised,
I have précised an interesting article by Alison Flood published in The
Guardian Weekly on 7th February. It would be nice to think it would
challenge some of the publishers and book sellers in New Zealand, but I have
little confidence they would even read it.

Figures last year from Vida, the American organisation for
women in the literary arts, show the huge imbalance in how male and female
writers, and reviewers, are treated. At the New York Review of Books, for
example, 16% of the reviewers were women, with 22% of the books reviewed
written by women.A similar
investigation in the Guardian revealed that the situation in the UK is no
better.In March 2013, 8.7% of books
reviewed in the London Review of Books were by women, rising to 26.1% in the
New Statesman, and 34.1% in the Guardian.

Daniel Pritchard, editor of the journal Critical Flame, has
announced a year dedicated to women writers and writers of colour, citing the
Vida figures as part of the reason for his decision and saying, “nothing will
change if people do not act morally within their spheres of control”.

“Women writers and writers of colour are under-served and
under-valued by the contemporary literary community,” he writes. “Silence on
this literary disparity has not been the problem over the past few years.
Inertia has.”

Author Joanna Walsh determined to do her bit to redress the
imbalance and started the ‘#readwomen2014’ project. It started with a few
Christmas cards which dubbed 2014 ‘the year of reading only women’, listing the
names of 250 women writers and encouraging recipients to actively choose to
read books from those authors. She was inundated with requests for more cards
and suggestions for other women authors to include.

Not only did the women respond positively; many men apart
from Pritchard have made reading resolutions of their own. Authors and readers
such as Matthew Jakubowski, Lilit Marcus and Jonathan Gibbs have all undertaken
to read only women writers. Jakubowski, an American author and literary critic
has resolved to read – and hence review – only books by women in 2014. In his
words – “if we don’t decide to do the work it takes to find valuable, important
books by women and under-represented authors, we will continue to miss them and
the loss will be ours.”

He believes news outlets still favour men over women when it
comes to book coverage and that publishers are more likely to spend large sums
on male writers. “The result of this investment by publishers is that readers
and literary critics are guided towards books by men.”

Gibbs, an author and journalist for the Independent
undertook his women-only reading stint after “reading Ben Lerner’s Leaving the
Atocha Station and basically getting peed off with that self-reflexive, ‘I know
I’m a shit and that makes me great’ male narrator type story.” Essentially, he
recognised he was reading through the filter of male consciousness and further,
that the book industry and media largely colluded in, or constructed the idea
that male writers are best. Gibbs assumes this is largely cultural and comes
down to the de Beauvoir quote about man being defined as a human being and a woman
as female, ie ‘Look, that’s the great literature, see how it writes about the
human condition!’ when in fact it’s only
writing about the male condition.

Of the publishers who have pulled out of New Zealand in the
last decade, how many were headed by men, do you think?

Saturday, 15 February 2014

The future is bleak. New Zealand books written by New
Zealanders about their land and its people may soon be a thing of the past.
Because of the changing nature of world economics, many of the big publishing
houses have deserted us. Over the recent past we have lost Penguin, Hachette,
HarperCollins and a bunch of others, leaving hundreds of bright, creative and
accomplished writers with no opportunity for ‘big-time’ publication and having,
in the final score, to fend for themselves.

There are budding Eleanor Cattons, Janet Frames and Lloyd
Joneses among us but, given the problems we now face, they may never see the
light of day.

But wait, as the advert says, there is more! And that ‘more’ is
the proliferation of self-publishing or, as we prefer to call it, ‘indie’
publishing.

To say that we Kiwi writers have taken to self-publishing
like the proverbial ducks to water is an under-statement. In spite of indie
publishing being challenging and scary, New Zealand writers are finding their
feet in this demanding new arena and are set to reach new heights.

There are downsides to indie publishing, one being the
inability of media book reviewers to see beyond their noses and give us the opportunity
to prove ourselves. Another challenge is that the big book sellers are reluctant
to stock our books, largely due to bookkeeping problems. Small independent book
sellers are far more accommodating – if you want a good book then go there
first! The other is that libraries, our mainstay, have shrinking budgets. They
tend to buy a limited number of books and then shuffle them around to their
branches. In my humble opinion, it would probably be cheaper to buy more books
than spend the money on petrol ferrying them to and fro. However....

Another downside is the technology, a fearsome ogre to
anyone who isn’t on first name terms with their computer.

On the upside you have cart blanche to make as big a mess as
you like of chaotic editing, a book cover designed by your wife and loads of
grammar- and spelling mistakes. Just kidding! Those are elements that define a
self-published book and you, being smart, modern and savvy, are not going to
make those errors. You are going to get a professional editor and a book cover
that looks as if it was designed by Gucci.

I’m one of a happy bunch of writers called the Mairangi
Writers’ Group. We operate in Auckland and have been going for about thirty
years. Our members have written and published upwards of thirty books in a
variety of genres, from children’s books to non-fiction to chick-ick lit. If you
don't know what chick-ick lit is, you’re in for a gory surprise!). We blog, we
arrange seminars while still writing prolifically and, at present, are busy
organising an all-out book fest for March where we celebrate our prodigious
output and our general expertise as writers.

We’re not going to let desertion by the ‘big boys’ stop good
New Zealand books from getting to readers. No way!

Friday, 7 February 2014

I have just completed my third, adult
thriller. I 'm often asked why Thriller Chillers?

Nothing, nothing captures the pain that
lies at the heart of human beings more than something overwhelmingly frightful,
loathsome, shocking and abhorrent.

The horror genre
is construed around such emotional and physical responses. It seeks to produce
in its audience anxious fright and hair-raising chills.

Across history
and culture, horror stories have served to document and illuminate the human
condition. Horror lies at the very heritage of literature, from scary
narratives in folklore and fairy tales to a long standing tradition of
fear-narration.

Horror lies in
the tension between the figurative and the real, the conscious and the
unconscious. It is an emotional response extremely personal.

'Man's
inhumanity to man', anger-motivated violence, murder, abuse, and the worst of
all acts, the deprivation and cruelty heaped upon our children are what
disgusts me. Since I have many untold happenings to draw on, I use these themes
in my more chilling works.

When writing
'thriller chillers' the emotional empathy becomes so strong that I find it
somewhat draining and frequently disturbing when the character takes over. I'm
often left wondering where that chilling idea or action came from

It was in 1951
that I tasted, for the first time, the extreme emotional forces associated with
horror. Few confrontations have divided New
Zealand as decisively as the 1951 Waterfront Dispute—the
longest, costliest and most widespread in New Zealand history. Few New
Zealanders were left unaffected during this time of great nationalism, civil
disobedience, prejudice, stubbornness, passion and anger.

It was also,
during this time of unrest, I discovered Edgar Allan Poe's, 'The Tell-Tale Heart,'
a tale where an old man's cloudy eye incites the narrator to an act of madness.

The hook,
'True——nervous—very, very, nervous I have been and am.' captured my attention,
the story as it unfolded, creepy, chilling, thrilling.

This was the
first time I identified with characters in a literary rendition. While I read,
'Meantime the hellish tattoo of the heart increased. It grew quicker and
quicker and louder and louder every instant,' my heart banged against my
ribcage and my pulse played a symphony in my ears. I heard that heart beating
in moments of silence, week after week.

I then tackled
Poe's poetry and was mesmerised by the lyricism and the economy of words used
to create a chill.

Leave
my loneliness unbroken!

-quit
the bust above my door

take
thy beak from out my heart,

and
take thy form from off my door!

Quoth
the Raven, "Nevermore"

And
the Raven, never flitting, still is sitting,
still is sitting

On
the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door;

And
his eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming,

And
the lamp-light o'er him steaming throws his shadow to the floor;

And
my soul from out the shadow that lies floating on the floor

Shall
be lifted-nevermore

Consequently,
fifty odd years on, having immersed myself in the works of Edgar Allan Poe,
Nathaniel Hawthorne, Mary Shelley and other canonised authors of horror
stories, when I came to writing, I chose, to write 'Thriller Chillers.' for
adults Not because works in the horror genre remain some of the best-selling
and most cherished books of all time, because, chilling experiences provide
coping strategies andI have so many
horrific acts which have never been aired in the public domain to weave into
works.